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Financial Risk Management
Zvi Wiener Following P. Jorion, Financial Risk Manager Handbook FRM
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Following P. Jorion 2001 Financial Risk Manager Handbook
Chapter 17 VaR Methods Following P. Jorion 2001 Financial Risk Manager Handbook FRM
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Risk Factors There are many bonds, stocks and currencies.
The idea is to choose a small set of relevant economic factors and to map everything on these factors. Exchange rates Interest rates (for each maturity and indexation) Spreads Stock indices Zvi Wiener
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How to measure VaR Historical Simulations Variance-Covariance
Monte Carlo Analytical Methods Parametric versus non-parametric approaches Zvi Wiener
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Historical Simulations
Fix current portfolio. Pretend that market changes are similar to those observed in the past. Calculate P&L (profit-loss). Find the lowest quantile. Zvi Wiener
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Example Assume we have $1 and our main currency is SHEKEL. Today $1=4.30. Historical data: 4.00 4.20 4.10 4.15 4.30*4.20/4.00 = 4.515 4.30*4.20/4.20 = 4.30 4.30*4.10/4.20 = 4.198 4.30*4.15/4.10 = 4.352 P&L 0.215 -0.112 0.052 Zvi Wiener
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USD NIS today Zvi Wiener
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today Changes USD: +1% +1% +1% +1% in IR NIS: +1% 0% -1% -1%
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Returns year 1% of worst cases Zvi Wiener
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VaR Profit/Loss 1% VaR1% Zvi Wiener
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Variance Covariance Means and covariances of market factors
Mean and standard deviation of the portfolio Delta or Delta-Gamma approximation VaR1%= P – 2.33 P Based on the normality assumption! Zvi Wiener
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Variance-Covariance 1% 2.33 -2.33 Zvi Wiener
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Monte Carlo Zvi Wiener
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Monte Carlo Distribution of market factors
Simulation of a large number of events P&L for each scenario Order the results VaR = lowest quantile Zvi Wiener
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Monte Carlo Simulation
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Weights Since old observations can be less relevant, there is a technique that assigns decreasing weights to older observations. Typically the decrease is exponential. See RiskMetrics Technical Document for details. Zvi Wiener
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Stock Portfolio Single risk factor or multiple factors
Degree of diversification Tracking error Rare events Zvi Wiener
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Bond Portfolio Duration Convexity Partial duration Key rate duration
OAS, OAD Principal component analysis Zvi Wiener
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Options and other derivatives
Greeks Full valuation Credit and legal aspects Collateral as a cushion Hedging strategies Liquidity aspects Zvi Wiener
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Credit Portfolio rating, scoring credit derivatives reinsurance
probability of default recovery ratio Zvi Wiener
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Reporting Division of VaR by business units, areas of activity, counterparty, currency. Performance measurement - RAROC (Risk Adjusted Return On Capital). Zvi Wiener
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Backtesting Verification of Risk Management models.
Comparison if the model’s forecast VaR with the actual outcome - P&L. Exception occurs when actual loss exceeds VaR. After exception - explanation and action. Zvi Wiener
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Backtesting OK Green zone - up to 4 exceptions increasing k
Yellow zone exceptions Red zone - 10 exceptions or more OK increasing k intervention Zvi Wiener
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Stress Designed to estimate potential losses in abnormal markets.
Extreme events Fat tails Central questions: How much we can lose in a certain scenario? What event could cause a big loss? Zvi Wiener
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Local Valuation Full Valuation
Simple approach based on linear approximation. Full Valuation Requires repricing of assets. Zvi Wiener
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Delta-Gamma Method The valuation is still local (the bond is priced only at current rates). Zvi Wiener
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FRM-97, Question 13 An institution has a fixed income desk and an exotic options desk. Four risk reports were produced, each with a different methodology. With all four methodologies readily available, which of the following would you use to allocate capital? A. Simulation applied to both desks. B. Delta-Normal applied to both desks. C. Delta-Gamma for the exotic options desk and the delta-normal for the fixed income desk. D. Delta-Gamma applied to both desks. Zvi Wiener
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FRM-97, Question 13 Bad question!
An institution has a fixed income desk and an exotic options desk. Four risk reports were produced, each with a different methodology. With all four methodologies readily available, which of the following would you use to allocate capital? A. Simulation applied to both desks. B. Delta-Normal applied to both desks. C. Delta-Gamma for the exotic options desk and the delta-normal for the fixed income desk. D. Delta-Gamma applied to both desks. Bad question! Zvi Wiener
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Mapping Replacing the instruments in the portfolio by positions in a limited number of risk factors. Then these positions are aggregated in a portfolio. Zvi Wiener
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Delta-Normal method Assumes linear exposures
risk factors are jointly normally distributed The portfolio variance is Forecast of the covariance matrix for the horizon Zvi Wiener
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Delta-normal Histor. MC Valuation linear full full
Distribution normal actual general Extreme events low prob. recent possible Ease of comput. Yes intermed. No Communicability Easy Easy Difficult VaR precision Bad depends good Major pitalls nonlinearity unstable model fat tails risk Zvi Wiener
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FRM-97, Question 12 Delta-Normal, Historical-Simulations, and MC are various methods available to compute VaR. If underlying returns are normally distributed, then the: A. DN VaR will be identical to HS VaR. B. DN VaR will be identical to MC VaR. C. MC VaR will approach DN VaR as the number of simulations increases. D. MC VaR will be identical to HS VaR. Zvi Wiener
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FRM-97, Question 12 Delta-Normal, Historical-Simulations, and MC are various methods available to compute VaR. If underlying returns are normally distributed, then the: A. DN VaR will be identical to HS VaR. B. DN VaR will be identical to MC VaR. C. MC VaR will approach DN VaR as the number of simulations increases. D. MC VaR will be identical to HS VaR. Zvi Wiener
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FRM-98, Question 6 Which VaR methodology is least effective for measuring options risks? A. Variance-covariance approach. B. Delta-Gamma. C. Historical Simulations. D. Monte Carlo. Zvi Wiener
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FRM-98, Question 6 Which VaR methodology is least effective for measuring options risks? A. Variance-covariance approach. B. Delta-Gamma. C. Historical Simulations. D. Monte Carlo. Zvi Wiener
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FRM-99, Questions 15, 90 The VaR of one asset is 300 and the VaR of another one is If the correlation between changes in asset prices is 1/15, what is the combined VaR? A. 525 B. 775 C. 600 D. 700 Zvi Wiener
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FRM-99, Questions 15, 90 Zvi Wiener
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Example On Dec 31, 1998 we have a forward contract to buy 10M GBP in exchange for delivering $16.5M in 3 months. St - current spot price of GBP in USD Ft - current forward price K - purchase price set in contract ft - current value of the contract rt - USD risk-free rate, rt* - GBP risk-free rate - time to maturity Zvi Wiener
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The forward contract is equivalent to
a long position of SP* on the spot rate a long position of SP* in the foreign bill a short position of KP in the domestic bill Zvi Wiener
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On the valuation date we have S = 1.6595, r = 4.9375%, r* = 5.9688%
Vt = $93,581 - the current value of the contract Zvi Wiener
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